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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,681 --> 00:00:03,431 (wind whistling) 2 00:00:06,751 --> 00:00:09,501 (dramatic music) 3 00:01:10,488 --> 00:01:12,778 (pleasant music) 4 00:01:12,780 --> 00:01:14,270 - [Narrator] Our aerial journey begins 5 00:01:14,270 --> 00:01:16,930 at the old whaling harbor of New Bedford, 6 00:01:16,930 --> 00:01:20,290 before crossing Buzzards Bay to Martha's Vineyard. 7 00:01:20,290 --> 00:01:24,070 Then it's across to Nantucket, another old whaling island, 8 00:01:24,070 --> 00:01:26,830 before heading north across Nantucket Sound 9 00:01:26,830 --> 00:01:30,810 to Cape Cod and Hyannis Port, home to the Kennedys. 10 00:01:31,880 --> 00:01:34,570 To the north is the Cape Cod National Seashore, 11 00:01:35,410 --> 00:01:36,930 and at the end of the peninsula 12 00:01:36,930 --> 00:01:39,230 is the old harbor of Provincetown. 13 00:01:48,010 --> 00:01:50,690 New Bedford on Massachusetts' south coast 14 00:01:50,690 --> 00:01:54,650 is nicknamed Whaling City, because in the 19th century, 15 00:01:54,650 --> 00:01:58,330 this was one of the largest whaling centers in the world, 16 00:01:58,330 --> 00:02:01,740 and the whale oil brought great wealth to the town. 17 00:02:01,740 --> 00:02:04,780 But by the mid 19th century, the oil was replaced 18 00:02:04,780 --> 00:02:07,530 with another type of fuel, petroleum, 19 00:02:07,530 --> 00:02:09,960 and the whaling industry declined. 20 00:02:09,960 --> 00:02:12,250 It was replaced by the cotton industry, 21 00:02:12,250 --> 00:02:15,770 and the old mills which once employed over 30,000 people 22 00:02:15,765 --> 00:02:19,475 still stand, but today they have found other uses. 23 00:02:20,610 --> 00:02:22,500 In the 1840s, there would have been 24 00:02:22,500 --> 00:02:26,100 around 700 whaling ships on the world's oceans, 25 00:02:26,100 --> 00:02:29,250 and 400 of them were in New Bedford Harbor. 26 00:02:29,248 --> 00:02:30,898 (gulls cawing) 27 00:02:30,900 --> 00:02:33,610 Voyages could sometimes last for years, 28 00:02:33,610 --> 00:02:36,630 as captains sailed the seas in search of whales. 29 00:02:38,100 --> 00:02:40,960 A good catch often meant great riches, 30 00:02:40,960 --> 00:02:43,210 and the crew would get a share. 31 00:02:43,210 --> 00:02:45,980 As a result, whaling drew thousands of men 32 00:02:45,980 --> 00:02:48,190 to sign up and risk their lives. 33 00:02:49,240 --> 00:02:50,690 One feature of the whaling industry 34 00:02:50,691 --> 00:02:54,091 was that captains would welcome men of different races, 35 00:02:54,090 --> 00:02:56,170 and on equal footing. 36 00:02:56,170 --> 00:02:57,950 In fact, in the 1840s, 37 00:02:57,950 --> 00:03:00,820 there was a black captain, Absalom Boston. 38 00:03:01,980 --> 00:03:04,680 The resulting whale oil gave rise to New Bedford 39 00:03:04,680 --> 00:03:08,100 being known as the city that lit the world. 40 00:03:10,620 --> 00:03:14,420 In the middle of the town is the Rotch-Jones-Duff House. 41 00:03:14,420 --> 00:03:17,230 The Rotches were a successful whaling family, 42 00:03:17,230 --> 00:03:20,600 and they built this Greek revival house in the 1830s. 43 00:03:22,130 --> 00:03:25,380 It was bought in 1851 by another whaler, 44 00:03:25,380 --> 00:03:26,480 Edward Coffin Jones. 45 00:03:27,900 --> 00:03:31,170 In 1935, it was sold to Mark Duff, 46 00:03:31,170 --> 00:03:34,220 a descendant of a New Bedford whaling family 47 00:03:34,220 --> 00:03:36,050 who restored the house and garden. 48 00:03:37,060 --> 00:03:40,420 Today it belongs to a local historic preservation group. 49 00:03:41,950 --> 00:03:44,560 Whaling was a tough and dangerous business, 50 00:03:44,560 --> 00:03:45,600 and whalers would visit 51 00:03:45,600 --> 00:03:48,750 the Seamen's Bethel before going to sea. 52 00:03:48,750 --> 00:03:52,070 The chapel was immortalized as the Whaleman's Chapel 53 00:03:52,070 --> 00:03:56,800 in Herman Melville's classic book of 1851, "Moby Dick." 54 00:04:00,070 --> 00:04:02,860 If the 19th century was the great age of sail, 55 00:04:02,860 --> 00:04:06,360 then perhaps the 20th century was the great age of flying, 56 00:04:06,360 --> 00:04:08,820 from early biplanes to modern jets. 57 00:04:09,750 --> 00:04:12,070 And at New Bedford Municipal Airport, 58 00:04:12,070 --> 00:04:15,520 the Wings of Freedom tour had arrived for an air show. 59 00:04:16,750 --> 00:04:19,900 Three World War II aircraft are owned and run 60 00:04:19,900 --> 00:04:21,770 by the Collings Foundation, 61 00:04:21,770 --> 00:04:24,430 which was established in 1979 62 00:04:24,430 --> 00:04:26,310 dedicated to preserve the aircraft 63 00:04:26,311 --> 00:04:29,451 and keep them flying as part of living history. 64 00:04:31,020 --> 00:04:33,730 The Wings of Freedom tour is designed to honor those 65 00:04:33,730 --> 00:04:35,050 who flew in the war, 66 00:04:35,050 --> 00:04:38,150 and educate a younger generation as well. 67 00:04:38,150 --> 00:04:40,870 Visitors can climb aboard, and those lucky enough 68 00:04:40,870 --> 00:04:44,260 to have a ticket can go on a 30 minute flight. 69 00:04:44,260 --> 00:04:48,160 This is the B-25 Mitchell bomber. 70 00:04:48,160 --> 00:04:51,480 And this is a B-17 Flying Fortress, 71 00:04:51,480 --> 00:04:54,420 and one of only 14 still flying in America. 72 00:04:55,880 --> 00:04:58,610 Behind is the B-24 Liberator, 73 00:04:58,610 --> 00:05:01,440 the only restored flying example in the world. 74 00:05:03,090 --> 00:05:05,590 All these aircraft now need a small fortune 75 00:05:05,590 --> 00:05:07,840 to be kept airworthy, and can cost 76 00:05:07,840 --> 00:05:12,090 up to $5,000 per flying hour to operate. 77 00:05:12,090 --> 00:05:16,930 And a new engine on a B-24 will cost nearly $80,000. 78 00:05:18,420 --> 00:05:22,290 The B-17 Flying Fortress is a heavy bomber made famous 79 00:05:22,290 --> 00:05:25,170 for its role in the daylight strategic bombing campaign 80 00:05:25,170 --> 00:05:27,430 over Europe in the 1940s. 81 00:05:28,390 --> 00:05:31,110 The B stands for bomber, not Boeing, 82 00:05:31,110 --> 00:05:33,580 who developed the aircraft in the 1930s. 83 00:05:34,900 --> 00:05:39,740 Nearly 13,000 B-17s were built over a 10 year period. 84 00:05:39,741 --> 00:05:42,491 (dramatic music) 85 00:05:52,480 --> 00:05:55,430 The B-25 Mitchell is a medium bomber, 86 00:05:55,430 --> 00:05:58,780 and perhaps most famous for the Doolittle Raid on Japan 87 00:05:58,780 --> 00:06:01,170 after Pearl Harbor in 1942. 88 00:06:02,250 --> 00:06:04,760 It came into service in 1941, 89 00:06:04,760 --> 00:06:07,310 and nearly 10,000 aircraft were built. 90 00:06:09,530 --> 00:06:12,600 The B-24 Liberator is a heavy bomber, 91 00:06:12,600 --> 00:06:15,200 which saw service in Europe and the Far East. 92 00:06:16,090 --> 00:06:19,000 The aircraft was designed to be mass produced, 93 00:06:19,000 --> 00:06:21,530 and at its peak, a new B-24 94 00:06:21,530 --> 00:06:24,660 rolled off the production line every hour, 95 00:06:24,660 --> 00:06:27,160 and nearly 19,000 were built. 96 00:06:31,275 --> 00:06:32,755 (birds chirping) 97 00:06:32,760 --> 00:06:33,870 Close to the airfield, 98 00:06:33,870 --> 00:06:37,360 and across parts of the state, are cranberry fields. 99 00:06:37,360 --> 00:06:41,230 This dwarf evergreen shrub is found in acidic bogs, 100 00:06:41,230 --> 00:06:43,990 and harvested in an unusual way. 101 00:06:43,988 --> 00:06:46,738 (pleasant music) 102 00:06:48,480 --> 00:06:50,810 Before harvesting the cranberry fields are flooded 103 00:06:50,814 --> 00:06:54,804 so that the water covers the plants by about six inches. 104 00:06:56,780 --> 00:06:58,640 The water wheel harvester, 105 00:06:58,640 --> 00:07:01,160 which has been used for over 50 years, 106 00:07:01,160 --> 00:07:03,590 then removes the fruit from the vines, 107 00:07:03,590 --> 00:07:06,160 allowing the berries to float to the surface. 108 00:07:07,070 --> 00:07:09,700 It is then easy to corral the cranberries 109 00:07:09,700 --> 00:07:13,480 into a corner of the field, and pump them into containers. 110 00:07:16,740 --> 00:07:20,570 Cranberries now have the commercial status of a superfruit, 111 00:07:20,570 --> 00:07:24,170 due to their nutritional and antioxidant qualities. 112 00:07:24,170 --> 00:07:27,900 And about 95% of the crop goes into juice, 113 00:07:27,900 --> 00:07:31,860 packaged as dried fruit, or of course, cranberry sauce. 114 00:07:31,860 --> 00:07:35,280 Such an essential part of the American Thanksgiving meal. 115 00:07:36,121 --> 00:07:38,871 (birds chirping) 116 00:07:40,270 --> 00:07:41,830 At the end of Butler Point 117 00:07:41,830 --> 00:07:44,000 is one of the few seaside golf courses 118 00:07:44,000 --> 00:07:46,450 in New England, the Kittansett Club. 119 00:07:47,400 --> 00:07:49,580 It was founded in 1922, 120 00:07:49,580 --> 00:07:51,660 and is one of America's most prestigious 121 00:07:51,660 --> 00:07:53,160 member only golf clubs, 122 00:07:53,160 --> 00:07:57,540 and for years it has been consistently ranked by Golf Digest 123 00:07:57,540 --> 00:08:00,660 as one of America's hundred greatest golf courses. 124 00:08:02,000 --> 00:08:05,030 The name Kittansett comes from a Native Indian word, 125 00:08:05,030 --> 00:08:06,770 meaning "near the sea." 126 00:08:08,620 --> 00:08:10,770 The best known hole is the third, 127 00:08:10,770 --> 00:08:12,020 which is on an island. 128 00:08:13,410 --> 00:08:17,270 It's a 165 yard par three, and a tee shot 129 00:08:17,270 --> 00:08:19,990 has to cross sand and water to reach the green. 130 00:08:20,930 --> 00:08:23,150 And if a player misses the island, 131 00:08:23,150 --> 00:08:25,590 they will end up taking a shot from the beach, 132 00:08:25,590 --> 00:08:28,080 but only if the tide is out. 133 00:08:30,610 --> 00:08:33,720 Just off the point is Bird Island Lighthouse, 134 00:08:33,720 --> 00:08:37,110 which has a history stretching back to 1819, 135 00:08:37,110 --> 00:08:39,260 making it one of the oldest in the country. 136 00:08:41,710 --> 00:08:44,800 The original lantern would have been lit with whale oil. 137 00:08:46,987 --> 00:08:49,567 (gulls cawing) 138 00:08:55,700 --> 00:08:58,610 In the great age of sail, the bay was full of ships 139 00:08:58,610 --> 00:09:00,740 trading with Europe and the Orient, 140 00:09:00,740 --> 00:09:03,620 as well as all the whaling ships setting out, or returning 141 00:09:03,620 --> 00:09:06,510 with their cargo of whale oil to home ports. 142 00:09:08,680 --> 00:09:11,860 In the middle of Buzzards Bay are the Elizabeth Islands. 143 00:09:13,450 --> 00:09:17,550 The largest is Naushon Island, which is privately owned, 144 00:09:17,550 --> 00:09:20,120 and protected by a family trust. 145 00:09:20,120 --> 00:09:21,830 In fact, seven out of the nine islands 146 00:09:21,833 --> 00:09:24,843 are owned by the same family. 147 00:09:24,840 --> 00:09:27,760 Nashawena Island is the second largest, 148 00:09:27,760 --> 00:09:31,200 and has an official population of just two people. 149 00:09:32,440 --> 00:09:35,600 And at the end of the chain is Cuttyhunk Island, 150 00:09:35,600 --> 00:09:37,550 the site of the first English settlement 151 00:09:37,550 --> 00:09:40,490 in New England around 1605. 152 00:09:42,090 --> 00:09:44,130 On the south side of Buzzards Bay 153 00:09:44,130 --> 00:09:46,490 is the island of Martha's Vineyard, 154 00:09:46,490 --> 00:09:47,940 and the Aquinnah cliffs. 155 00:09:49,230 --> 00:09:51,520 From these shores, the Wampanoag Indians 156 00:09:51,520 --> 00:09:54,710 went hunting for whales centuries before the rise 157 00:09:54,710 --> 00:09:57,330 of the great whaling age of the 19th century. 158 00:09:57,330 --> 00:10:00,020 (gentle piano music) 159 00:10:00,020 --> 00:10:03,120 The brightly colored clay cliffs are now protected, 160 00:10:03,120 --> 00:10:05,640 as they form part of the spirituality and myths 161 00:10:05,637 --> 00:10:09,377 of the Wampanoag people, who form the greater part 162 00:10:09,380 --> 00:10:10,580 of the local population. 163 00:10:11,429 --> 00:10:13,759 (gulls cawing) 164 00:10:13,757 --> 00:10:17,007 Due to the chalk, the sea has a rare aqua color, 165 00:10:17,010 --> 00:10:20,280 especially when the waves pound the cliffs, 166 00:10:20,280 --> 00:10:22,840 and sometimes a reddish color is released, 167 00:10:22,840 --> 00:10:24,330 as the waves wash over them. 168 00:10:26,560 --> 00:10:29,300 Standing on the top is Gay Head Lighthouse, 169 00:10:29,300 --> 00:10:32,260 built in the 1850s, and replacing an earlier one 170 00:10:32,260 --> 00:10:34,180 from the end of the 18th century, 171 00:10:34,180 --> 00:10:36,900 which due to erosion, was getting too close 172 00:10:36,900 --> 00:10:38,720 to the edge of the cliffs. 173 00:10:38,718 --> 00:10:41,298 (gentle music) 174 00:10:44,690 --> 00:10:47,210 The lighthouse was also lowered in height 175 00:10:47,210 --> 00:10:49,160 so that the light, which can be seen 176 00:10:49,160 --> 00:10:50,960 from over 20 miles away, 177 00:10:50,960 --> 00:10:52,920 could get under the dangerous fog 178 00:10:52,920 --> 00:10:54,850 that often rolls into the bay. 179 00:10:56,918 --> 00:10:59,458 (dramatic music) 180 00:10:59,460 --> 00:11:02,060 The main port of entry to Martha's Vineyard 181 00:11:02,060 --> 00:11:05,570 is Vineyard Haven, and known as Nobnocket 182 00:11:05,570 --> 00:11:07,560 by the Wampanoag Native Americans. 183 00:11:08,800 --> 00:11:11,870 Most of the town was built just over 100 years ago, 184 00:11:11,870 --> 00:11:16,600 because in 1883, a terrible fire swept through the old town 185 00:11:16,600 --> 00:11:20,090 and destroyed an area of around 50 acres. 186 00:11:20,090 --> 00:11:23,070 Thankfully, a few of the old houses survived. 187 00:11:24,150 --> 00:11:26,440 Today, it is summer tourism which swells 188 00:11:26,440 --> 00:11:29,650 the year round population of nearly 3,000 people, 189 00:11:29,650 --> 00:11:32,550 and most of the houses are summer residences 190 00:11:32,550 --> 00:11:34,580 where beachside houses for rent 191 00:11:34,580 --> 00:11:37,370 can cost well over $1,500 a week. 192 00:11:38,210 --> 00:11:40,940 During the great age of sail in the 19th century, 193 00:11:40,940 --> 00:11:43,530 the harbor was one of New England's busiest, 194 00:11:43,530 --> 00:11:46,510 as it was in a strategic position for coastal shipping. 195 00:11:47,390 --> 00:11:52,390 And in 1845, nearly 14,000 ships passed through the harbor. 196 00:11:54,740 --> 00:11:58,260 On the east coast of Martha's Vineyard is Oak Bluffs, 197 00:11:58,260 --> 00:12:00,250 which was the first center for tourism 198 00:12:00,250 --> 00:12:02,200 back in the early 19th century 199 00:12:02,200 --> 00:12:05,250 when it was known as Tent City. 200 00:12:05,250 --> 00:12:07,470 This was because the Methodist church members 201 00:12:07,468 --> 00:12:10,288 would come each summer, pitch their tents, 202 00:12:10,290 --> 00:12:12,800 and hold open air meetings. 203 00:12:12,800 --> 00:12:15,870 And after a while, cottages replaced tents, 204 00:12:15,870 --> 00:12:18,460 and Oak Bluffs became a town. 205 00:12:18,460 --> 00:12:21,080 During the summer months, a ferry service runs 206 00:12:21,080 --> 00:12:22,980 from the mainland at Cape Cod, 207 00:12:22,980 --> 00:12:24,370 bringing in holiday visitors 208 00:12:24,369 --> 00:12:26,469 which swell the local population 209 00:12:26,472 --> 00:12:30,302 from 15,000 to 150,000 people. 210 00:12:31,970 --> 00:12:34,050 Over the years, Martha's Vineyard has been 211 00:12:34,050 --> 00:12:36,660 a favorite haunt of the rich and famous, 212 00:12:36,660 --> 00:12:39,030 who can afford the millions of dollars needed 213 00:12:39,030 --> 00:12:40,680 to buy a beachside house. 214 00:12:42,290 --> 00:12:45,510 Edgartown is the largest town on Martha's Vineyard, 215 00:12:45,510 --> 00:12:48,230 and stands opposite Chappaquiddick Island, 216 00:12:48,230 --> 00:12:52,450 which suddenly became internationally known in 1969 217 00:12:52,450 --> 00:12:55,080 when Senator Edward Kennedy was prosecuted 218 00:12:55,080 --> 00:12:56,960 for failing to report an accident 219 00:12:56,960 --> 00:13:00,520 when he drove off Dike Bridge, and his passenger, 220 00:13:00,520 --> 00:13:03,320 Mary Jo Kopechne, was drowned. 221 00:13:03,320 --> 00:13:05,930 The incident caused a national scandal. 222 00:13:08,090 --> 00:13:11,360 Alongside Martha's Vineyard is Nantucket, 223 00:13:11,360 --> 00:13:15,000 and on the west side are a series of low-lying islands. 224 00:13:16,790 --> 00:13:20,150 The first is Muskeget, which is now deserted, 225 00:13:20,150 --> 00:13:23,460 and very difficult to get to except in special boats 226 00:13:23,462 --> 00:13:26,172 due to shifting sand bars and riptides. 227 00:13:27,060 --> 00:13:30,510 The island was designated as a national natural landmark 228 00:13:30,510 --> 00:13:33,000 by the Park Service in 1980. 229 00:13:34,361 --> 00:13:37,711 (waves crashing) 230 00:13:37,710 --> 00:13:40,010 Muskeget is perhaps the most famous 231 00:13:40,009 --> 00:13:43,709 of the southernmost breeding place of gray seals, 232 00:13:43,710 --> 00:13:46,640 which are also known as the Atlantic gray seal, 233 00:13:46,640 --> 00:13:48,250 and the horsehead seal. 234 00:13:48,252 --> 00:13:51,002 (soothing music) 235 00:13:55,400 --> 00:13:58,310 The island is one of the primary seal colonies 236 00:13:58,310 --> 00:13:59,960 off the New England coast, 237 00:13:59,957 --> 00:14:04,267 and since 1972, they have been protected from hunters 238 00:14:04,270 --> 00:14:06,320 by an act of Congress. 239 00:14:06,320 --> 00:14:09,660 And today, around 2,000 pups are born each year 240 00:14:09,660 --> 00:14:10,560 during the autumn. 241 00:14:12,160 --> 00:14:15,440 However, this increase in population has made it 242 00:14:15,440 --> 00:14:17,910 a feeding ground for great white sharks, 243 00:14:17,910 --> 00:14:20,350 who feast on their vulnerable pups. 244 00:14:25,343 --> 00:14:29,053 Tuckernuck Island is owned by its summer residents, 245 00:14:29,050 --> 00:14:31,100 who live in the 35 houses. 246 00:14:35,650 --> 00:14:39,170 The island has no paved roads or public utilities. 247 00:14:39,170 --> 00:14:40,840 Water comes from wells, 248 00:14:40,840 --> 00:14:44,040 and electricity is run from gas power generators 249 00:14:44,040 --> 00:14:46,360 along with solar panels. 250 00:14:46,360 --> 00:14:50,460 And most of the transport is provided by golf carts. 251 00:14:50,464 --> 00:14:53,214 (waves crashing) 252 00:14:56,270 --> 00:14:58,700 For those not wanting such a simple life, 253 00:14:58,700 --> 00:15:03,150 then on Nantucket all the public utilities are available. 254 00:15:03,150 --> 00:15:07,020 The whole island was made an historic district in 1966 255 00:15:07,020 --> 00:15:10,140 to protect the landscape and buildings. 256 00:15:10,136 --> 00:15:14,556 The village of Madaket is on the western end of the island, 257 00:15:14,560 --> 00:15:16,810 where a large number of summer residences 258 00:15:16,810 --> 00:15:19,630 have been built in all shapes and sizes. 259 00:15:21,300 --> 00:15:23,810 In the summer, the population of Nantucket 260 00:15:23,810 --> 00:15:27,890 swells from 10,000 to over 50,000 people 261 00:15:27,890 --> 00:15:30,080 who come to the island for the good weather, 262 00:15:30,080 --> 00:15:35,080 wonderful beaches, glorious sunsets, and peace and quiet. 263 00:15:35,510 --> 00:15:38,760 (gentle guitar music) 264 00:15:38,760 --> 00:15:41,650 Nantucket is also the name of the main town 265 00:15:41,650 --> 00:15:44,110 on the north side of the island. 266 00:15:44,110 --> 00:15:46,950 This was once the world's leading whaling port, 267 00:15:46,950 --> 00:15:49,020 and in Herman Melville's "Moby Dick," 268 00:15:49,020 --> 00:15:51,120 he refers to the Nantucketers 269 00:15:51,120 --> 00:15:53,170 who search the ocean for whales, 270 00:15:53,172 --> 00:15:58,172 "For the sea is his, he owns it as emperors own empires." 271 00:15:59,740 --> 00:16:02,870 A great fire, fueled by the stocks of whale oil, 272 00:16:02,870 --> 00:16:06,170 destroyed much of the town in 1846. 273 00:16:06,170 --> 00:16:08,540 The same fate that awaited Vineyard Haven 274 00:16:08,540 --> 00:16:10,070 nearly 40 years later. 275 00:16:12,180 --> 00:16:14,030 This, together with the decline of whaling 276 00:16:14,030 --> 00:16:15,840 and the silting up of the harbor 277 00:16:15,840 --> 00:16:17,690 devastated the town, 278 00:16:17,690 --> 00:16:19,730 and it was not until the start of tourism 279 00:16:19,730 --> 00:16:23,730 in the mid 20th century that Nantucket's fortunes looked up. 280 00:16:23,729 --> 00:16:26,309 (gentle music) 281 00:16:29,570 --> 00:16:32,760 Whaling ships have given way to jet catamarans 282 00:16:32,760 --> 00:16:35,660 which ferry passengers to and from the mainland 283 00:16:35,660 --> 00:16:38,510 in excess of 40 miles an hour. 284 00:16:38,510 --> 00:16:41,240 The jet motors ensures that no animals are struck 285 00:16:41,240 --> 00:16:42,900 under the shallow water, 286 00:16:42,900 --> 00:16:45,160 as there are no propellers below the surface. 287 00:16:48,260 --> 00:16:50,990 There are also regular car ferries as well, 288 00:16:50,990 --> 00:16:53,480 and for the wealthier visitor, the local airport 289 00:16:53,480 --> 00:16:55,410 can cope with private jets. 290 00:16:55,412 --> 00:16:58,002 (gentle music) 291 00:17:04,200 --> 00:17:06,770 Needless to say, property on Nantucket, 292 00:17:06,770 --> 00:17:09,950 both to buy as well as rent, is very expensive. 293 00:17:14,210 --> 00:17:17,290 Some houses can cost over $20 million, 294 00:17:17,293 --> 00:17:19,633 and even a small condominium 295 00:17:19,630 --> 00:17:22,700 will set you back around $200,000. 296 00:17:24,890 --> 00:17:27,100 And a beachside rental can set you back 297 00:17:27,100 --> 00:17:29,560 anything up to $20,000 a week. 298 00:17:30,850 --> 00:17:33,540 Nantucket is an expensive playground. 299 00:17:33,539 --> 00:17:36,119 (gentle music) 300 00:17:44,600 --> 00:17:46,740 On the east coast at Siasconset, 301 00:17:46,740 --> 00:17:49,870 the cliffs are lined with expensive summer residences. 302 00:17:53,770 --> 00:17:57,180 However, the sea is slowly eroding the cliffs away, 303 00:17:57,180 --> 00:17:58,960 and it will not be too many years 304 00:17:58,960 --> 00:18:01,150 before the front row of houses 305 00:18:01,150 --> 00:18:03,140 suddenly land up as beach huts. 306 00:18:04,510 --> 00:18:07,740 In 2007, the Sankaty Head Lighthouse, 307 00:18:07,740 --> 00:18:12,300 which was built in 1850, was moved about 100 meters inland 308 00:18:12,300 --> 00:18:14,480 to avoid it tumbling into the sea. 309 00:18:15,570 --> 00:18:20,570 In 1843, an engineer noted that, "There is a fatal spot 310 00:18:20,707 --> 00:18:22,427 "along the coast of Massachusetts 311 00:18:22,427 --> 00:18:25,497 "where many a brave heart and many a gallant ship 312 00:18:25,497 --> 00:18:28,137 "lie buried in one common grave." 313 00:18:28,980 --> 00:18:32,060 The shoals of Nantucket are known and dreaded 314 00:18:32,060 --> 00:18:34,830 by every navigator on the Atlantic, 315 00:18:35,920 --> 00:18:38,540 and the light still shines out today. 316 00:18:40,470 --> 00:18:42,360 On the northern tip of Nantucket 317 00:18:42,360 --> 00:18:44,370 are two finger-like peninsulas, 318 00:18:44,370 --> 00:18:48,200 which form the Coskata-Coatue Wildlife Refuge. 319 00:18:48,200 --> 00:18:51,920 Visitors can see horseshoe crabs, basking seals, 320 00:18:51,920 --> 00:18:55,400 shorebirds, deer, and even raptors. 321 00:18:56,650 --> 00:18:59,940 And right on the end is Great Point Lighthouse, 322 00:18:59,940 --> 00:19:03,000 which has been aiding ships for over three centuries. 323 00:19:05,290 --> 00:19:07,840 On the mainland, across Nantucket Sound, 324 00:19:07,840 --> 00:19:10,220 is Cape Cod, and Hyannis. 325 00:19:11,370 --> 00:19:13,890 The town is much like others in the area, 326 00:19:13,890 --> 00:19:16,780 and in the summer, becomes a major holiday center. 327 00:19:17,660 --> 00:19:20,320 But it's also a town which holds a unique place 328 00:19:20,320 --> 00:19:22,910 in the hearts of many people around the world, 329 00:19:22,910 --> 00:19:24,740 as the home of one of the most popular 330 00:19:24,740 --> 00:19:28,580 post-war presidents in America, John F. Kennedy. 331 00:19:29,920 --> 00:19:32,650 Along the coast is Hyannis Port, 332 00:19:32,650 --> 00:19:35,660 and home to the Kennedy family, and in particular, 333 00:19:35,660 --> 00:19:38,750 John F. Kennedy, the 35th president. 334 00:19:38,750 --> 00:19:41,460 The Kennedy compound is a six acre site 335 00:19:41,460 --> 00:19:44,550 which is now a national historic landmark. 336 00:19:44,550 --> 00:19:46,490 The original house was owned 337 00:19:46,490 --> 00:19:49,460 by the president's father, Joseph Kennedy. 338 00:19:49,460 --> 00:19:52,170 John, along with his brothers and sisters, 339 00:19:52,170 --> 00:19:54,740 spent childhood holidays here. 340 00:19:54,740 --> 00:19:55,940 The house was later used 341 00:19:55,940 --> 00:19:59,010 as the base for his presidential campaign, 342 00:19:59,012 --> 00:20:02,052 and later still as a summer White House. 343 00:20:03,070 --> 00:20:05,390 Over the years, other members of the family 344 00:20:05,390 --> 00:20:07,690 had houses in the compound. 345 00:20:07,690 --> 00:20:10,830 The last resident was Senator Edward Kennedy, 346 00:20:10,830 --> 00:20:13,330 and after his death in 2009, 347 00:20:13,330 --> 00:20:17,140 the compound can become an education center and a museum. 348 00:20:19,400 --> 00:20:21,830 On November the ninth, 1960, 349 00:20:21,830 --> 00:20:23,850 President-elect John F. Kennedy 350 00:20:23,850 --> 00:20:27,580 gave his victory speech here, at the Hyannis Armory 351 00:20:27,580 --> 00:20:30,420 of the Massachusetts National Guard. 352 00:20:30,420 --> 00:20:33,840 It is now on the national register of historic places. 353 00:20:37,300 --> 00:20:39,450 Following the president's tragic assassination 354 00:20:39,450 --> 00:20:43,080 in Dallas in 1963, a small memorial park 355 00:20:43,080 --> 00:20:45,330 was dedicated to his memory. 356 00:20:45,330 --> 00:20:47,560 It's a place where people can quietly sit 357 00:20:47,560 --> 00:20:49,020 and listen to the sea, 358 00:20:49,019 --> 00:20:53,239 and it was at sea that the president spent many happy days 359 00:20:53,240 --> 00:20:55,890 as his family had a lifelong interest in sailing. 360 00:20:59,890 --> 00:21:02,610 The memorial overlooks Lewis Bay, 361 00:21:02,610 --> 00:21:05,170 where he was seen as a boy learning to sail, 362 00:21:05,170 --> 00:21:08,160 and later, taking his own children out to sea. 363 00:21:12,220 --> 00:21:15,450 Cape Cod is a thin, U-shaped peninsula, 364 00:21:15,450 --> 00:21:17,660 and protects Cape Cod Bay, 365 00:21:17,660 --> 00:21:21,350 where Europeans first started whaling in the 17th century. 366 00:21:21,347 --> 00:21:24,097 (dramatic music) 367 00:21:26,150 --> 00:21:29,350 On the east side, where the Atlantic Ocean meets the land, 368 00:21:29,350 --> 00:21:31,820 is the Cape Cod National Seashore. 369 00:21:31,820 --> 00:21:35,920 40 miles of coast, ponds, and pine woods. 370 00:21:35,920 --> 00:21:39,240 It became a national park through the support 371 00:21:39,240 --> 00:21:41,580 of John F. Kennedy in 1961. 372 00:21:42,700 --> 00:21:44,950 And around four million people a year 373 00:21:44,950 --> 00:21:47,480 come to enjoy the unspoiled beaches. 374 00:21:52,430 --> 00:21:55,840 The seashore is one of Massachusetts' true wonders, 375 00:21:55,843 --> 00:21:59,263 and the 19th century American poet and naturalist 376 00:21:59,260 --> 00:22:03,050 Henry David Thoreau wrote after standing on the beach, 377 00:22:03,047 --> 00:22:05,007 "That a man may stand there, 378 00:22:05,007 --> 00:22:07,367 "and put all America behind him." 379 00:22:07,367 --> 00:22:10,117 (dramatic music) 380 00:22:20,370 --> 00:22:22,280 The Cape Cod National Seashore 381 00:22:22,280 --> 00:22:24,160 follows the curve of the peninsula, 382 00:22:24,160 --> 00:22:25,710 right to its northern end. 383 00:22:27,980 --> 00:22:30,800 And at the northern end is Provincetown, 384 00:22:30,800 --> 00:22:32,410 which has a history stretching back 385 00:22:32,410 --> 00:22:34,190 to the early 17th century, 386 00:22:34,190 --> 00:22:36,560 and the arrival of the pilgrim fathers. 387 00:22:42,020 --> 00:22:44,530 With the abundance of fish as well as whales, 388 00:22:44,530 --> 00:22:46,990 it is not surprising that the town flourished 389 00:22:46,990 --> 00:22:49,740 as a major fishing center during the 18th century. 390 00:22:51,240 --> 00:22:54,460 Following the American Revolution, it grew rapidly, 391 00:22:54,460 --> 00:22:55,980 and the population was bolstered 392 00:22:55,980 --> 00:22:58,270 by a number of Portuguese sailors 393 00:22:58,270 --> 00:23:01,710 who after working on American ships, came to settle here. 394 00:23:06,680 --> 00:23:08,200 By the end of the 19th century, 395 00:23:08,200 --> 00:23:11,660 Provincetown was becoming a center for writers and artists, 396 00:23:11,660 --> 00:23:13,800 and as the fishing industry declined, 397 00:23:13,800 --> 00:23:17,100 the art community took over many of the buildings. 398 00:23:17,100 --> 00:23:19,490 Among the writers who once resided here 399 00:23:19,490 --> 00:23:22,200 were Tennessee Williams and Eugene O'Neill, 400 00:23:22,200 --> 00:23:25,840 and artists included Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning. 401 00:23:29,510 --> 00:23:31,790 In the mid '60s, the character of the place 402 00:23:31,790 --> 00:23:34,100 appealed to the hippie movement, 403 00:23:34,100 --> 00:23:36,820 as property was cheap, and rents low, 404 00:23:36,820 --> 00:23:39,090 especially during the winter. 405 00:23:39,090 --> 00:23:41,970 In the 1970s, the town became a pioneer 406 00:23:41,970 --> 00:23:43,960 in promoting gay tourism, 407 00:23:43,960 --> 00:23:45,340 and is now one of the best known 408 00:23:45,340 --> 00:23:47,760 gay summer resorts on the East Coast. 409 00:23:49,460 --> 00:23:53,510 Today, Provincetown attracts around 30,000 visitors a year, 410 00:23:53,510 --> 00:23:55,970 who come not only for the various festivals, 411 00:23:55,970 --> 00:23:58,180 but also the landscape and coast 412 00:23:58,180 --> 00:23:59,980 now part of the national seashore. 413 00:24:01,880 --> 00:24:04,620 It's interesting to think how the founding fathers 414 00:24:04,620 --> 00:24:07,010 would've reacted to this forward, artistic, 415 00:24:07,010 --> 00:24:08,270 and free thinking town. 416 00:24:11,770 --> 00:24:13,540 Perhaps their spirits look down 417 00:24:13,540 --> 00:24:16,410 from the most distinctive monument in the town, 418 00:24:16,410 --> 00:24:18,910 and in fact the tallest granite structure 419 00:24:18,910 --> 00:24:20,370 in the United States. 420 00:24:21,320 --> 00:24:25,280 It commemorates the landing of the pilgrim fathers in 1620, 421 00:24:25,280 --> 00:24:28,020 who spent five weeks here exploring Cape Cod 422 00:24:28,018 --> 00:24:29,618 before heading inland. 423 00:24:31,270 --> 00:24:33,680 It's while the pilgrim fathers were here, 424 00:24:33,680 --> 00:24:36,500 that they drew up the Mayflower Compact, 425 00:24:36,500 --> 00:24:39,190 a forerunner of the American Constitution. 426 00:24:40,650 --> 00:24:43,470 The monument was built in 1907 427 00:24:43,470 --> 00:24:46,860 and was based on the Italian Renaissance tower in Siena, 428 00:24:46,864 --> 00:24:49,924 but it came in for some harsh criticism 429 00:24:49,920 --> 00:24:52,280 because of its lack of relevance. 430 00:24:52,280 --> 00:24:54,990 One Boston architect commented that, "If all they want 431 00:24:54,987 --> 00:24:57,117 "is an architectural curiosity, 432 00:24:57,117 --> 00:24:59,477 "then why not select the Leaning Tower of Pisa 433 00:24:59,477 --> 00:25:00,957 "and be done with it?" 434 00:25:00,960 --> 00:25:04,220 However, an old Provincetown sea captain said, 435 00:25:04,217 --> 00:25:07,987 "That it resembles lighthouses on the coast of Portugal, 436 00:25:07,987 --> 00:25:11,207 "and Provincetown we know is full of Portuguese." 437 00:25:12,180 --> 00:25:14,900 Today, it is climbed by thousands of tourists 438 00:25:14,900 --> 00:25:17,460 from around the world, who get wonderful views 439 00:25:17,459 --> 00:25:20,199 over the whole of Cape Cod. 440 00:25:20,200 --> 00:25:23,280 What a perfect place to finish this journey. 441 00:25:23,282 --> 00:25:26,032 (pleasant music) 442 00:25:37,319 --> 00:25:40,069 (dramatic music) 33348

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